These Are the Most Expensive Homes Sold in Chicago in 2012

While Chicago’s median home prices are bottoming out, big-ticket prices are soaring. The year even set a new record for the highest amount ever paid for a Chicago residence.

By Dennis Rodkin

Published March 19, 2013

Photography: (all photos) Todd Urban

(From left) Gold Coast Co-op, Park Tower Aerie, and River North Condo

The area’s most expensive homes scaled new heights last year, statistically and literally. Three of the six priciest sales were in skyscrapers, including a Park Tower spread that sold for $15 million, the most ever paid for a Chicago residence. Meanwhile, a North Shore lakefront mansion went for $12.3 million, making 2012 the first year since 2008 that the area saw two deals top $10 million. While this probably doesn’t signal a quick bounce in the broader housing market—“the upper end is another world,” explains Chezi Rafaeli, a Coldwell Banker agent (he sold 1 and 6 below)—it’s an encouraging sign that people with plenty of cash want to invest it here.

1. $15 million: PARK TOWER AERIE
Ken Griffin, CEO of hedge fund firm Citadel, and his wife, Anne, bought the 66th floor at 800 North Michigan Avenue in November. (They already owned the penthouse.) It boasts 7,900 square feet of living space and a 660-square-foot terrace with knockout views of the lake and the skyline.

2. $12.3 million: WINNETKA MANSION
On December 31, an unidentified buyer rang in the new year by snapping up a six-bedroom Mediterranean-style mansion, which had last sold for $7.1 million in 2005. Built in 1928, it overlooks the lake and has a large swimming pool.

3. $7.5 million: GLENCOE NEWBIE
Built in 2007, this 13-room French provincial house languished on the market as its would-be buyers worked out the financing. Among the amenities: a remote-controlled elevator that descends to a private beach on Lake Michigan.

4. $7.5 million: BARRINGTON HILLS ESTATE
In July, this 70-acre property—which includes a 30,000-square-foot house, two golf holes, and a fish-stocked pond—sold for barely half of what the sellers were first asking.

6. $6.4 million: RIVER NORTH CONDO
Originally priced at $7.9 million, an 8,100- square-foot home on the 47th floor of the Fordham (25 E. Superior St.) has only three bedrooms—but five terraces and a movie theatre.

. . . And the Highest Farther Afield

Most of the sales at left were in Cook County (the Barrington Hills sale was in McHenry County). Tops in four other nearby counties: